Victims of Fashion: Sacred Peaks and Stone-Washed Jeans

Leif Utne

| December 19, 2000

Victims of Fashion: Sacred Peaks and Stone-Washed
Jeans

The White Vulcan pumice mine, which supplies stones to
denim-finishing companies, sits atop 90 acres of National Forest
land in Arizona's San Francisco Peaks--land considered sacred to 13
Native American tribes. Now the mine's owner, Flagstaff-based
Tufflite, Inc., wants to expand. The tribes, teamed with local
environmentalists, want to shut the mine down. For years the
law--specifically the 1872 General Mining Law--has been on
Tufflite's side, reports Brad Miller in Earth Island
Journal. But soon that may change.

'Thanks to the 1872 Mining Law,' which was signed by Ulysses S.
Grant to encourage prospectors to head West and 'dispose of public
lands,' Miller writes, 'Tufflite is not required to pay royalties
on' most of the pumice it mines 'and is allowed to purchase and
mine public lands for only $2.50-$5 per acre.'

The tribes argue that it is ludicrous to allow 'further destruction
of the countryside in this sacred area so the fashion-conscious can
wear pants which make them appear to have spent time outside,' says
Miller.

The U.S. government may have a history of siding with the mining
industry in such disputes, but this time the tables may have turned
in favor of Tufflite's opponents. 'The [US Forest Service] has
recognized the San Francisco Peaks as a Traditional Cultural
Property and plans to nominate them for inclusion in the National
Register of Historic Places,' Miller points out, adding that 'The
USFS also has recommended that the Interior Department approve a
'mineral withdrawal' that would protect more than 74,000 acres of
land encompassing the peaks from any new mining claims for 20
years.' And on a recent visit to the site Interior Secretary Bruce
Babbitt told Tufflite, 'It's time to quit. Time to go home.'--Leif
UtneGo there>>